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EC7010 Robotics and Automation

This document provides an overview of the EC7010 Robotics and Automation course taught by Dr. Lilantha Samaranayake at the University of Peradeniya. The course covers topics such as introduction to autonomous robots, motors and motor control, sensors and actuators, robot intelligence, vision, and a mini robot design project. References are also provided but not included. Key applications of robotics discussed include industrial, commercial, military, medical, planetary exploration, and underwater exploration. An image of a Mars rover is suggested to accompany the planetary exploration section.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
55 views24 pages

EC7010 Robotics and Automation

This document provides an overview of the EC7010 Robotics and Automation course taught by Dr. Lilantha Samaranayake at the University of Peradeniya. The course covers topics such as introduction to autonomous robots, motors and motor control, sensors and actuators, robot intelligence, vision, and a mini robot design project. References are also provided but not included. Key applications of robotics discussed include industrial, commercial, military, medical, planetary exploration, and underwater exploration. An image of a Mars rover is suggested to accompany the planetary exploration section.

Uploaded by

books san
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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EC7010

Robotics and Automation


Dr. Lilantha Samaranayake
Department of Electrical & Electronic Engineering
Faculty of Engineering
University of Peradeniya
[email protected], +94812393426
Course contents
 Introduction to Autonomous Robots (1h)
 Current and Future Trends in Robotics (2h)
 Motors and Motor Control Techniques (4h)
 Sensors and Actuators (4h)
 Autonomous Mobile Robots and Robot Intelligence (4h)
 Robot Control Board
 Pneumatic and Hydraulic Control Systems
 Machine Vision Dr. Parakrama Ekanayake
 Programmable Logic Controllers
 Robot Design Mini Project
References
Introduction to Autonomous Robots
Motivation

 Intelligent Environments are aimed at improving the inhabitants’


experience and task performance
 Automate functions in the home
 Provide services to the inhabitants
 Decisions coming from the decision maker(s) in the environment have
to be executed.
 Decisions require actions to be performed on devices
 Decisions are frequently not elementary device interactions but
rather relatively complex commands
 Decisions define set points or results that have to be achieved
 Decisions can require entire tasks to be performed
Automation and Robotics in Intelligent
Environments
 Control of the physical environment
 Automated blinds
 Thermostats and heating ducts
 Automatic doors
 Automatic room partitioning
 Personal service robots
 House cleaning
 Lawn mowing
 Assistance to the elderly and handicapped
 Office assistants
 Security services
Robotics in general
 Historical perspective
 The acclaimed Czech playwright Karel Capek (1890-
1938) made the first use of the word ‘robot’, from the
Czech word for forced labor or serf.
 The use of the word Robot was introduced into his play
R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots) which opened in
Prague in January 1921. In R.U.R., Capek poses a
paradise, where the machines initially bring so many
benefits but in the end bring an equal amount of blight
in the form of unemployment and social unrest.
 Science fiction
 Asimov, among others glorified the term ‘robotics’,
particularly in I, Robot, and early films such as
Metropolis (1927) paired robots with a dystopic society
 Formal definition (Robot Institute of America):
 "A reprogrammable, multifunctional manipulator designed to
move material, parts, tools, or specialized devices through
various programmed motions for the performance of a variety
of tasks".
Robots in everyday use and popular culture

http://www.robotshop.com/robotic-trends.aspx
Common applications
 Industrial
 Robotic assembly

 Commercial
 Household chores

 Military
 Medical
 Robot-assisted surgery

da Vinci surgical system


Common applications
 Planetary Exploration
 Mars rover
 Undersea exploration

Suggested insertion:
image of Mars rover
Autonomous Robots
 The control of autonomous robots involves a number of subtasks
 Understanding and modeling of the mechanism
 Kinematics, Dynamics, and Odometry
 Reliable control of the actuators
 Closed-loop control
 Generation of task-specific motions
 Path planning
 Integration of sensors
 Selection and interfacing of various types of sensors
 Coping with noise and uncertainty
 Filtering of sensor noise and actuator uncertainty
 Creation of flexible control policies
 Control has to deal with new situations
Traditional Industrial Robots
 Traditional industrial robot control uses robot arms
and largely pre-computed motions
 Programming using “teach box”
 Repetitive tasks
 High speed
 Few sensing operations
 High precision movements
 Pre-planned trajectories and
task policies
 No interaction with humans
Problems
 Traditional programming techniques for industrial
robots lack key capabilities necessary in intelligent
environments
 Only limited on-line sensing
 No incorporation of uncertainty
 No interaction with humans
 Reliance on perfect task information
 Complete re-programming for new tasks
Requirements for Robots in Intelligent
Environments
 Autonomy
 Robots have to be capable of achieving task objectives
without human input
 Robots have to be able to make and execute their own
decisions based on sensor information
 Intuitive Human-Robot Interfaces
 Use of robots in smart homes can not require extensive
user training
 Commands to robots should be natural for inhabitants
 Adaptation
 Robots have to be able to adjust to changes in the
environment
Autonomous Robot Control
 To control robots to perform tasks autonomously a number of
tasks have to be addressed:
 Modeling of robot mechanisms
 Kinematics, Dynamics
 Robot sensor selection
 Active and passive proximity sensors
 Low-level control of actuators
 Closed-loop control
 Control architectures
 Traditional planning architectures
 Behavior-based control architectures
 Hybrid architectures
Modeling the Robot Mechanism
 Forward kinematics describes how the robots joint
angle configurations translate to locations in the world

2 (x, y, z)
1

(x, y, )

 Inverse kinematics computes the joint angle


configuration necessary to reach a particular point in
space.
 Jacobians calculate how the speed and configuration
of the actuators translate into velocity of the robot
Modeling:
Coordinate frames & forward kinematics
• Three coordinate frames: 0 1 2

• ‘0’ is the base frame (world frame), ‘2’ is the tool frame

• Positions:
2
[ ][
x1
y1
a cos (θ1 )
= 1
a1 sin (θ 1 ) ]
[ ][
x2
y2
a cos (θ 1 )+ a 2 cos (θ1 + θ 2 )
= 1
a 1 sin (θ1 )+ a2 sin (θ 1 + θ 2 ) ][]
≡ x
y t 0 1
• Orientation of the tool frame:

R20 =  xˆ2  xˆ0 yˆ 2  xˆ0  = cos(θ1 + θ2 )  sin (θ1 + θ2 )


   
 xˆ2  yˆ 0 yˆ 2  yˆ 0  sin (θ1 + θ2 ) cos(θ1 + θ2 ) 
Modeling:
Inverse kinematics
• Find the joint angles for a desired tool position

xt2 + yt2  a12  a22


cos(θ2 ) =  D  sin(θ2 ) = ± 1  D 2
2a1a2
 1 D2  1  y  1  a2sin(θ2 ) 

1
θ2 = tan ±  θ = tan    tan  
 
D 
1
 x  a1 + a2 cos(θ2 ) 

• Two solutions!: elbow up and elbow down
Modeling:
Velocity kinematics: the Jacobian (J)
 State space includes velocity

x  a1 sin 11  a2 sin 1   2  1  2 
y  a cos   a cos      
1 1 1 2 1 2  1 2 
 x   a1 sin 1  a2 sin 1   2   a2 sin 1   2  1 
 y    a cos  a cos    a cos       
   1 1 2 1 2 2 1 2   2 

x  J
t

 x   1 
xt   ,    

 y   2 
 Inverse of Jacobian gives the joint velocities:
  J 1 xt
1  1  a2 cos1   2  a2 sin 1   2    x 
    a cos  a cos     a sin   a sin      y 
 2  a1a2 sin  2  1 1 2 1 2 1 1 2 1 2  

 This inverse does not exist when 2 = 0 or , called


singular configuration or singularity
Modeling:
Singular configurations

 Manipulator end-effector cannot move in certain directions.


 In the above cases the end effector cannot move in the positive x2 direction
when 2 = 0.
 Related to the nonuniqueness of solutions of the inverse kinematics., i.e.,
given end-effector position, there are in general two possible solutions to
the inverse kinematics.
 Separates the two solutions in the sense that the manipulator cannot go
from one configuration to the other without passing through a singularity.
 For many applications it is important to plan manipulator motions in such a
way that singular configurations are avoided.
Mobile Robot Odometry
 In mobile robots the same configuration in terms of joint
angles does not identify a unique location
 To keep track of the robot it is necessary to
incrementally update the location (this process is
called odometry or dead reckoning)
t  t t
 x  x   vx 
     
 y   y    v y t
      
     
 Example: A differential drive robot
r (L  R ) r (L  R ) L R
v x  cos( ) , v y  sin( )
2 2 (x, y, )
r

  L  R
d

Actuator Control
 To get a particular robot actuator to a particular
location it is important to apply the correct amount of
force or torque to it.
 Requires knowledge of the dynamics of the robot
 Mass, inertia, friction
 For a simplistic mobile robot: F = m a + B v
 Frequently actuators are treated as if they were
independent (i.e. as if moving one joint would not
affect any of the other joints).
 The most common control approach is PD-control
(proportional, differential control)
 For the simplistic mobile robot moving in the x
direction:
F  KP xdesired  xactual   KD vdesired  vactual 
Robot Navigation

 Path planning addresses the task of computing a


trajectory for the robot such that it reaches the
desired goal without colliding with obstacles
 Optimal paths are hard to compute in particular for
robots that can not move in arbitrary directions
(i.e. nonholonomic robots)
 Shortest distance paths can be dangerous since they
always graze obstacles
 Paths for robot arms have to take into account the
entire robot (not only the end-effector)
Sensor-Driven Robot Control

 To accurately achieve a task in an intelligent


environment, a robot has to be able to react
dynamically to changes on its surrounding
 Robots need sensors to perceive the environment
 Most robots use a set of different sensors
 Different sensors serve different purposes
 Information from sensors has to be integrated into the
control of the robot

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